Debt, quantified labour, compromised autonomy, and quiet trade-offs hidden inside systems designed to feel convenient.
Autonomy Line treats debt as behavioural architecture rather than a number. Credit becomes a claim on future decisions, restricted access, identity, mobility, and the range of choices a person is still allowed to imagine.
The system does not need to confiscate a life all at once. It can price each compromise separately, describe every surrender as convenience, and leave the user technically free inside a corridor built from accumulated obligations.
- debt
- autonomy
- finance
- identity
- technology
Future choices as collateral
The debt is repaid through access, behaviour, and narrowing autonomy.
Quantified labour
Work becomes a continuous measurement of risk, usefulness, and compliance.
Convenient surrender
The infrastructure remains attractive because refusal becomes more expensive than participation.
“We were never just paying interest. We were paying ourselves away.”Autonomy Line
For readers of financial dystopia, debt systems, quantified labour, identity under contract, and speculative fiction about the price hidden inside convenience.
Formats and editions
| Format | Status | Price | ASIN | Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kindle eBook | Live | $3.99 USD | B0DTFMRVMB | Amazon ↗ |
| Paperback | Live | $12.95 USD | B0DTHL6PDW | Amazon ↗ |
| Hardcover | Live | $19.95 USD | B0DTGHTR37 | Amazon ↗ |


